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Friday, May 4, 2012

Life Inc. - Your Twitter feed may be costing, or landing, you a job #SoulcialMe

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More than one-third of employers are snooping social networking sites before hiring a candidate.

By Allison Linn

Attention jobseekers: You probably want to clean up your Twitter feed, lock down your Facebook profile and gussy up your LinkedIn page.

There is a good chance your prospective employer is snooping around about you on social networking sites.

A new survey from CareerBuilder finds that 37 percent of human resource managers are using social networking sites to research potential job candidates, and another 11 percent plan to start.

What’s more, they’re using social media to make hiring decisions.

About one-third of hiring managers who are using social networking sites to screen candidates say they didn’t hire someone because they found something online that raised an issue about the candidate. The most common red flags were inappropriate or provocative photos or information, or something about the candidate drinking or using drugs.

The findings don’t mean you should shutter your social media life completely. A good social strategy could land you a job.

A little less than one-third of respondents said they had found something on social media that caused them to hire the candidate. Those hiring managers said social media gave them a good feel for the candidate’s personality, conveyed a professional image and supported the qualifications they had been given.

CareerBuilder surveyed about 2,000 hiring managers and human resources professionals for the study.

The findings come as more companies are getting aggressive about screening candidates via social networking, even going so far as to demand a candidate’s Facebook password. The state of Maryland recently became the first to ban that practice.

In the CareerBuilder survey, 15 percent of respondents said their employers prohibited using social media to screen candidates.

The issue is coming up with current employees too. A Library of Congress employee recently accused his employer of firing him after learning via Facebook that he was gay.

Do you think social media helps or hurts in a job search?

Results with 9 short comments

Total of 774 votes - click on the "Display Comments" bar below to sort comments

11.9%
It helps because I use it to show my qualifications
92 votes

76%
It hurts because it gives employers unnecessary insight into my personal life
588 votes

12.1%
I'm not sure
94 votes

Display Comments:

I'm not sure

Facebook is generally understood to be an informal social network for friends, while LinkedIn is more professionally-oriented.

     - 12:00 pm EDT on Wed Apr 18, 2012

    It hurts because it gives employers unnecessary insight into my personal life

    As long as there's nothing out there to be ashamed of, then you're fine. But, if there's anything embarrassing it could cost you a job.

    • 2 votes
     - laurazz
     - 12:19 pm EDT on Wed Apr 18, 2012

    It hurts because it gives employers unnecessary insight into my personal life

    I disagree with this practice. Work is work and my personal life is just that....personal. They have no business snooping.

    • 6 votes
     - 12:41 pm EDT on Wed Apr 18, 2012

    It hurts because it gives employers unnecessary insight into my personal life

    while working for Comcast I tweeted something bad from an account that didn't even use my name and got asked about it via company IM in min

    • 1 vote
     - 2:33 pm EDT on Wed Apr 18, 2012

    It hurts because it gives employers unnecessary insight into my personal life

    Nobody in their right mind of employable age should use Facebook or Twitter.

    • 1 vote
     - Chuckx
     - 8:13 am EDT on Thu Apr 19, 2012

    I'm not sure

    It wouldn't hurt to see potential employer's Facebook pages . Maybe I don't want to work for a company based on their Facebook pages.

       - 9:06 am EDT on Thu Apr 19, 2012

      It helps because I use it to show my qualifications

      They're trusting their good will to you. What better way to check your worthiness than things you wrote when you thought no one was looking

         - 10:59 am EDT on Thu Apr 19, 2012

        It hurts because it gives employers unnecessary insight into my personal life

        It's too easy for things to be viewed out of context and too easy for the searchers personal prejudices to come into play.

           - 12:21 pm EDT on Thu Apr 19, 2012

          It hurts because it gives employers unnecessary insight into my personal life

          Using your real name I suggest you discuss work you do for the church, how hard you work and charitable causes... I know not YOU but ...

             - GHX
             - 8:53 pm EDT on Sat Apr 21, 2012

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